2020-03-01 MIT Sloan Management Review

(Martin Jones) #1

14 MIT SLOAN MANAGEMENT REVIEW SPRING 2020 SLOANREVIEW.MIT.EDU


FRONTIERS: BUILDING THE FUTURE WORKFORCE


change how we educate both traditional
college-age students and adult learners.
Last year, when 4,500 people gathered
at the ASU GSV Summit in San Diego to
discuss innovation both in education and
in talent development writ large, it was
clear that the companies in attendance
were eager to find alternative paths. At this
conference, political leaders and policy-
makers join CEOs and VCs to discuss the
imperative of investing in human capital.
Entrepreneurs in attendance work fer-
vently to sell their wares or make deals, the
likes of which have fueled a sharp increase
in global mergers and acquisitions of edu-
cation and talent development companies,
up in total value from $4 billion in 2008
to $40 billion in 2018.^1 Executives from
leading companies like Apple, Google,
Facebook, Workday, and Salesforce.com
attend to share ideas and learn about new
ways forward.
The annual event provides a regular
check-in on the state of corporate learn-
ing. In part, it’s meant to coax companies
to focus their efforts, because there’s still a
fundamental mismatch between how
much they say they want to strategically
invest in their current and future employ-
ees and what they actually do.
On a keynote panel last year, Leighanne
Levensaler, the executive vice president of
corporate strategy at Workday, bemoaned a
great lack of investment in human capital
despite all the buzz around the topic.
Michelle Weise, the senior vice president of
workforce strategies at Strada Education
Network and the chief innovation officer
for the Strada Institute for the Future of
Work, has written that although 93% of
CEOs surveyed by PwC recognized “the
need to change their strategy for attracting
and retaining talent,” a stunning 61% re-
vealed that they hadn’t yet taken any steps
to do so.^2 Employees seem to agree.
According to a recent survey by Harvard
Business Publishing Corporate Learning
and Degreed, nearly half of employees are


disappointed in their employer’s learning
and development programs.^3
But there are some notable exceptions
to this prevailing trend. For instance, in
July 2019, Amazon announced that it
would “spend $700 million over six years
on postsecondary job training for 100,
of its soon-to-be 300,000 workers.” For
now, Amazon says it intends to outsource
that training to traditional colleges and
universities. (For more detail, see “Betting
Big on Employee Development,” in this
issue.) But once Amazon has begun to pro-
vide the bridge for that training, it’s not
hard to imagine that it will be well posi-
tioned to create that training itself —
without the “middle man” of colleges and
universities — in the future.^4 Although
Amazon’s competitors will undoubtedly
keep a close eye on its training moves, per-
haps the education industry ought to keep
an even closer eye, given that those moves
may herald a total transformation in the
landscape of learning, from college
through retirement.
To put this development into perspec-
tive, it’s worth stepping back to consider
how learning has already evolved in recent
years before situating Amazon’s announce-
ment within the broader opportunities and
challenges facing employers.

What’s Next for
Adult Learning?
Education is in the midst of digital
transformation.
That this is true is no longer hotly de-
bated. Online learning emerged over two
decades ago as a technology category that
enables a range of potentially disruptive
business models. No longer do students
need to convene at a central location to
enjoy a real-time, interactive experience
with a teacher and peers. They can instead
participate from anywhere in the world, in
a more affordable and convenient fashion.
This trend is growing rapidly in post-
secondary education. Today, roughly a

third of students in the United States take
at least one online course as part of their
accredited higher-ed experience, and over
15% study exclusively online.^5 Many of
these students are adults who are em-
ployed while they learn. Countless more
workers take supplemental courses on
platforms like Coursera, Udemy, and edX.
Indeed, online learning has led to the
creation of numerous organizations and
offerings that support companies’ talent
development efforts. For example,
Pluralsight, LinkedIn Learning (built on
the acquisition of Lynda.com), Learn@
Forbes, and Udacity help employers re-skill
the workforce in myriad areas, often in
specialized or cutting-edge fields. Startups
like Guild Education and InStride allow
companies to work with colleges and
universities to offer learning as a benefit.
Degreed has emerged to measure and help
assess the learning and skills inside an
organization. Coding and engineering
boot camps like General Assembly and
Galvanize, and other so-called last-mile
education providers (many of which offer
blended or fully online programs), are
increasingly working directly with enter-
prises. And universities like Arizona State,
Bellevue, Southern New Hampshire, and
Ashford, as well as schools like Ultimate
Medical Academy, are partnering directly
with companies such as Starbucks and
Walmart to offer education to employees.
The pace of innovation in corporate
learning is frenetic — and highly uneven.
As providers compete to serve enterprises,
there is not one monolithic answer for
what corporate learning will look like in
the future. Just as companies have always
patched together a variety of learning
solutions to support their needs, they
will most likely continue to do so.
But what this abundance of new ap-
proaches and players has led to is the
same thing that disruptive innovation
has wrought in countless other fields: far
more affordable and convenient options.

Education, Disrupted (Continued from page 13)

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